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nuckster wrote:Yeach! Watching the Canucks last night was plain...yeach. So here is just one thought I would like to put forward about it.
I don't really get it. Zack was playing well, an so were many of the other 2nd and 3rd liners, while Kesler and Booth were away. Zack was our leading scorer early on and now he's been dropped down to 4th line minutes and less. Is this a reflection of AV's way of doing things or ... what? How is a number 1 draft pick with an offensive upside supposed to develop by playing a limited role like this?
Any comments/opinions about this?

Topper wrote:He can learn to play responsibly in his own end before being rewarded with more ice time. Just as Kesler, Burrows, Hansen and Raymond did before him.
The only guy who didn't go that route was stumpy and that was because he was having his tyres pumped in order to be dumped.
Topper wrote:Lets reward the sophomore for his poor defensive play by giving him more ice time while demoting and taking ice time from the vet who is playing responsibly.
nuckster wrote:Topper wrote:Lets reward the sophomore for his poor defensive play by giving him more ice time while demoting and taking ice time from the vet who is playing responsibly.
Hey now, be nice. I appreciate the reasonable/sensible comments though. Thanks


Topper wrote:Lets reward the sophomore for his poor defensive play by giving him more ice time while demoting and taking ice time from the vet who is playing responsibly.
Jovocop wrote:Did Kassian start his poor defensive play before or after he was demoted? I thought he did make good defensive plays when he was with the Sedins. He had tons of confidence and the results showed that.
Jovocop wrote:Once he was shuffled down one line per game or two, he is just not the same player.
Aaronp18 wrote:He was playing much more responsible at the beginning of the season but I think there's a good reason for this.
We saw the younger players in the league look great and out-skate and even out-score some of the veterans who didn't play during the lockout. Kassian, and others that played, were a slight step ahead of the inactive players.
He had that extra split second to make a play. That time has disappeared now that the majority of players are up to game speed. Because of that Kassian is finding things a bit tougher out there as he doesn't have that extra second to make a decision. He now needs to get used to the normal NHL pace of play.
You can see this all over the league, the guys that normally top the scoring charts are back up there. The young guns that put up some points in the first couple weeks have tailed off substantially.
Kassian now has to work to earn his top 6 icetime. He deserved it at the beginning of the year but he's finding the NHL game speed tough to catch up to now. It will come but he needs to realize that his game needs to get better and the effort must be put in every shift.
Hockey Widow wrote:With Kesler gone for 4-6 weeks we might yet see Kassian back with the twins as Burrows rotates throughout the line up.
nuckster wrote:Yeach! Watching the Canucks last night was plain...yeach. So here is just one thought I would like to put forward about it.
I don't really get it. Zack was playing well, an so were many of the other 2nd and 3rd liners, while Kesler and Booth were away. Zack was our leading scorer early on and now he's been dropped down to 4th line minutes and less. Is this a reflection of AV's way of doing things or ... what? How is a number 1 draft pick with an offensive upside supposed to develop by playing a limited role like this?
Any comments/opinions about this?
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